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Having sold its x86 server business to Lenovo, IBM has set up a programme to persuade Linux customers on its x86 servers, to move across to its current generation of IBM Power systems. The system ...
Uses Samsung's enhanced 7nm node with 2.5D stacking IBM has wheeled out its Power11 server CPU at Hot Chips 2025, giving it ...
IBM Power Systems play big in the mission-critical markets where reliability, performance, and longevity matter—hence the 65 NPS score and strong presence in the financial, retail, and telco ...
Red Hat Runtimes on IBM Power Systems: Red Hat Runtimes, a set of products, tools and components designed to develop and maintain cloud-native applications, is now supported on IBM Power Systems.
IBM CEO Krishna: With AI, ‘Flexibility Of Deployment Is Key’ IBM Power Systems IBM has about 55,000 worldwide channel partners, 12,000 in North America, according to CRN’s 2023 Channel Chiefs.
IBM unveiled its first Power9 server, the Power System AC922, Tuesday at the AI Summit in New York. It runs a version of the Power9 chip tuned for Linux, with the four-way multithreading variant SMT4.
IBM claims that the combination of Power8 processors and Linux software results in systems that deliver 80 percent more performance per dollar than the latest x86-based (Intel or AMD) servers.
Power AI Vision is IBM’s DL application set for doing what the name implies, using DL for vision processing. Today’s announcements included IBM integrating the two applications.
IBM Power Systems now feature Red Hat OpenShift on IBM Power Virtual Server leveraging OpenShift’s bare metal installer, Red Hat Runtimes, and newly certified Red Hat Ansible Content Collections.
Built on IBM’s POWER8 technology and designed for an era of Big Data, the new scale-out IBM Power Systems servers culminate a $2.4 billion investment, three-plus years of development and exploit the ...
IBM's AC922 Power Systems embed PCI-Express, Nvidia's NVlink 2.0, and OpenCAPI. Written by Larry Dignan, Contributor Dec. 5, 2017 at 5:00 a.m. PT ...
A lot of those workloads run on IBM Power Systems with their Power processors, and, until now, IBM was essentially the only vendor that offered cloud-based Power systems.